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}¦¦* tvdh VGL.SXXIX. LANCAJSim. PA., Siim^ 1865. NO. 14. THB fantasUt ^mam ^ Itralb Is PixUlUbad «w«*y Wediie»doy, The Examiner and Herald and I« Pixtjllaliea. avary Satofdasr^ AT S2} A YEAR, OR $2 IH ADVANCE. OtflCS No. S2H SORTH liVKBN STSEET. I i,HIESTAND,iItmS,k J.I.lAMMAN, BdltOT« and ppoprJetoiw. ^ Att tmdiua UUot, coomimtoUtu* te., Bhould bj.ddrciMdtoOio " :El3C»I«xJl«-<»I'," I.anCBiteri Fa. ADVEKIISISa DKPABTMSNT. EnraiBS Ao-raEnBOiKra by tli« ye«r, or taoUonB or a V^tobJchwg.d at th. r=t» of $12.00 MP 8<nwr. of tm llnei. Ton Ptr cent Increan on the yoMly r.lo.»<r«UonBOf.yajrj^^ 6 ¦»»«.. 12 r««tt.. Ol. Sonsrs. » »¦'» » 8.00 $111.00 Tll^Srei.::: «•¦» W-OO 20-00 lSe«an.r.. 12.00 50.00 2S.O0 rj:it E.TATK, PZRTO.'.Ai. PnoPiaTY and GMiaiL ai^vee. TI5IN0 to ba charged at tha rate of Seixn eanti per liaa for tha first Inaertlon, and Pour eenta per line Inr esary sobKaquont Insertion. P.TKST MEDICISE3. BitTiBs, and all other ADTmiiai. 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IHFSOMPID. nv JAMES S. WATKIS3. Xo .'loads in Uic heavens abovo ua aro seen To d.arken tlio light of the fair Summor sky, And Funshino flings bylison down o'or tho green. As softly its rays descend from on hijjh. MJici is heard tbo swoet songs of children aloud. As thocar oftho bridegroom tho streeta pass along— " Ti-rico hapiiy, thrice happy thc blcesel young hride, Tiic bride tbat tho noon-day sun ahineth on !" List lo tho hcIIi, lho bolls of your tower. Learn yo tho lesaon thoir lightest notes leach, F,ir solemn and alcm wo hear their loud tolling— Tho sermon that ever their iron tongues preach. Kinging foiover, forever Ihrough life • i'rom the rool to tho hui, the hud lo the hloom— Wo hear their gtavo mnsic, from morning tiU night,* l:in£ing the dead to tboir rest in tho lomh. The bright Summer's sky is ?udden o'crshadoired. Drops from the leaden clouds heavily fall, \V*a--hins'.ho loose-lying clods from tho tomb. And dripping all over tho plume and tho pall. Au-:ntiveand-solcmn wo list to the murmnrs. The murmur we hear as death's train moves' along— I ^ "Thri?o happy, Ihricc happy the'olesscd one dead, liiiiec hapny is sho the rain raincth on !" Wc'.ftentiincs thint wo havo many pleasures, pleasures of earth that with death arc all rife ; They point us beneath tho cold-sodded grave, A^d tell ns death often Icadeth to Ufe. .\nd yet one great truth wo'vo all stUl to learn. That " Life ie our lohor and Di-uOi I. our reat." Though thegravo mny its victory o'er us regain— " If happy itliile Urtnij— irlirii ilea.! ice .ire Ileal!" Baltimore, Md., Feb., ISOJ. SQTJIEE EOWLETS BIEFICTILTY SOIVED. Till! sun vras Elanling over the green ineadows throwing the branching shad¬ ows ofthe oak trees jn unnatural length upon tho grass, emerald green in its first upspiinging from thescythe. There wag all around the sweet hush"bf summer eve —Nature's diurnal Sabbath—when Squire Rowley betook himself, tlirough the sha¬ dy lanes which skirted ths meadows afore¬ said, to Dame Margaret's cottage at the , entrance of the little village, whoso own¬ ership lie divided with her. Wherefore ho choose this, the longer route, we will not prp.-ume to guess. It wos a pleasaut path by the meadows—but the squire may have loved thesoent of thc wild hon¬ ey-suckle, or he may havo chosen tomarjc the graceful trail of the hedge-rose, or he raay have mistrusted the good-will of the fiery young bull which had just been turned abroad for au evening's airing.— Anyway, he walked along at a leisurely pace, his gold-liea'led cane in his hand, his looks full of grave meditation- The s'juire was always heedful of his at¬ tire, but on thia evening any observer might havo detected a more than usual carefulriess- Iiis lace ruiHes, of the finest Jlechlin, were freshly put on ; a diamond of the first water glistened on his breast, and unother on Iiis finger; his chin was smoothly shaven, and an extra dash of pov/der whitened the smooth curls of his . best v!\^. Dame ilargaret Ciichlon was a widow of some years' standiog. .She had been ¦ the bosom friend of Squire Rowley's lady, as she was now tho indulgent and trusted confidante of his pretty hair-brained daughtf-r. Many a mad scrape, many a truant escapade, had been compounded for and 'pardoned through the intercession of Diime Margaret; many a threatened day of incarceration had been saved the little madcap through the same kindly means. Squire Rowley would shake his head and say: " WeU, well; tho lass can't be so bad as long as sho does not scruple to run to ¦ Dame Margaret for confession. I hate your sly jades who hold their tongues and keep their tricks to be found out." It must be acknowledged that Dame Margaret was a very templing ladycon- fcssor. There was a soft gleam in her bright blaok eyes, and a loving dimple in her round rosy cheek, which might havo wiled aw.ay the ascrots of a Macbiavelli. Very buxom was the dame withal; and she had the trimmest ankie and the most ringing laugh in Oakendale. Moreover, .she w.as well dowered inland and gold, so til 11 gossips wondered how it was lhat Dame Margaret CricUton remained Dame Margaret Criohton still. Mayhap the squire wondered too, as he opened the tittle wicket-gate set in the liigh trim hedge of box, and came in sight of the dame feeding her poultry on the grass at the side of the vine-covered house (for it iv.is a house flnd not a cot tage, although it could bear no compari¬ son with the stately home of tho squire.) Her ebon curls glanced purple in the warm glow of the setting snn; for Damo Margaret disdained the uso of powder.— Ill-natured folks said that she was bent on showing the world that not a thread of silver yet provoked such concealment. Be that as it may, the squire thought, as he looked at her, that the long flowing tresses matched e.xceediag!y well with the cherry-colored ribbons in the jaunty little cap, and lay in pretty contrast against the slender white throat. More¬ over, it struck him with quite a new sense of appreciation how wi:ll-ordered was Dame Margaret's smiling abode. The atill room maid sang at her needle as" she sat at her open window, the dame's favorite tabby winking and purring in sleek con¬ tentment on the sill before her; and Do¬ rothy, the portly cook, had brought her lace pillow and low kitchen chair out to the back door, lookiag over the green meadowa, and sat there twisting and "clicking" her bobbins with an air of lei- •nrely contentment. The orchard-treeo wera bending down under their promise of future fruit; tha fat yard-dog, as he basked in the sun, at the full. length of his chain, looked all too broad for the narrow lunits of his kennel; th6 very chickens, as ttey peofead at the mistreaa'a Sngera, in impatient reminder of their unsatisfied wants, had a plumpness which belonged to them alone. AU this, as vras said before, the squire noted with a new zest of admiration as he gave the dame " Good-morrow," dof¬ fing his broad-brimmed hat with the ela¬ borate courtesy which waa his wont. And Dorothy, the cook, who called herself a woman of experience, marked, amidst the clatter of her bobbins, how long the squire held the rosy tips of madam's mittened fingers, looking the while into the bright eyes, whioh looked very frankly baok again to his. And Dorothy, observant still, noted how the dame and the squire sauntered up and down the trim gravel path, between the rows of purple gilly¬ flowers, and pungent ^lavender, and tall ghostly lilies, sending out their odors on the ovening air. -Ind Dorothy saw, what the dame's downcast eyes did not, how .the squire, ever and anon, as the discourse went on, looked tenderly down upon the ribbons and the curls, .and all tho pretty things besides. Dorothy would have been disappointed, though, if she had been near enough, to find that there was a question of nothing more than Madam Sybil's last prank.— The dame lookod grave and shook her head when she heard how her young pro'cgee had been brought up, in boy's at¬ tire, in the ignominious keeping of the village constable. Sybil was already past sixteen, aud euch a public exhibition was decidedly too much. The dame—dear little match-making soul!—had counted on marriage as the ultimate steadier and reclaimer of the madcap Sybil; but such tricks as these, when noised abroad, as infallibly they would be, might scare away the eligible youth of tbe neighbor¬ hood, and set the damsel beyond the pale of matrimonial redemption. "Well, well, poor lass!" sighed the squire, "she has no mother ; it's a hard task, Dame Margaret, to a father to bring up and guide a wayward maiden aione." And the squire laid a significant em¬ phasis on the last word, and looked more tenderly than ever down upon the ma¬ tured charms at his side. But the em¬ phasis and the look were both lost. Dame Margaret's eyes were bent, in absent mus¬ ing, upon a tuft of double red daisies,and she only answered, in demure unconsci¬ ousness— " True, sir." The squire felt at a loss; they had reached the end of the walk, and in si¬ lence thoy prepared for another turn.— The d.ame's quilted petticoat and grace¬ ful looped up skirts swung quickly upon the high heels of her iittle velvet slip¬ pers : but the squire's embarrassment caused him to miss the exact angle ofthe turning, rendered somwhat nice and dif¬ ficult by the proximity of a sweetbriar bush. -Mas for the Mechlin ruflles ! The delicate, costly fabric hung impaled upon a bristling array of tiuy spikes, Madame started forward with the instinct of her sex. Too late. One impatient, heedless jerk, and the dainty Mechlin hung in threads. But tho squire's hand was free, and the damo's Which had been raised in sympathetic aitl wis (mean advantage!) caught ond detained close prisoner. " Will Dame Margaret take pity on a lonely man? Will the friend of her mother accept a mother's name and duty, and Lake to herself the right to guide and restrain my .Sybil's thoughtless youth?" The dame was taken aback—ahe really wos! In spite of the supposecl normal proclivity of her estate, she had never, even up to the very moment of dciiuucrncnt, dreamt that it w.as this way the squire's attentions were tending. .So shs turned first pale as one of her own whito lilies, then red as the daisies at her feet; then, moved by a sudden instinct, she raised her eyos, and wit^ one rapid glance took in the squire's jicr.^onnel. Nothing very discouraging thero. .Justice as he waa, his tall ereot figure showed none of the proverbial rotundity of his claas; it was slim and well proportioned as that ofany g.allant of half his ago and none of his dignity. The country squiro, too, in his youth had mi.T;ed in court and city life, and had gained that high-bred polish which marked his age, whilst preserving the native rectitude and nobility of soul which are sometimes sacrificed in the ac¬ quisition of outward refinement. Squire Rowley, too, was in the very prime of mauhood ; he wanted yet full a lustre of his half-ceatury ; his hair was as guiltless of natural snow as was the dame's own. .\\\ this she had known before, had known with the knowledge of every-day intimate acquaintance ; doubtless, she now would try how it all looked in the new light which had so suddenly dawned upon her. Her mind was of the vnpid sort; clear, tru'!, unclogged by small affectations and peevish hair-spilttings, it had the habit of going straight to its poiit, and that point'was seldom enough the wrong one. .So, whilst the squire kept fast hold of the imprisoned hand, its owner Tent through a rapid mental survey.whioh,after leaving the squire went straight to the dissection of her own hoart, and found—why, that the man had been beforehand, even with her woman's penetration; that, there, waiting for the spark which ho had brought to kindle it, were ready set the fuel and tho pile, .just, in fact, as the maid prepared the fire iu tho bright grate of the shining hearth of the " best parlor." And having raade the discovery, unex¬ pected aa it was, D.ime Margaret was not, as we have seen, the woman to refine upon unnecessary scruples or indulge in a pre¬ tence of hesitation or false modesty. So eho gave admittance to the sacred fire, and whilst the flame leaped and sparkled in joyous exultation, she turned her eyes again upon the cxpeotant.squire, and .sim¬ ply uttered— " Yes." And then she made thc prettiest little curtsey in the world. And the squire, raising the hand he had held all through to his lips in bo"th his, imprinted thereon a fervent kiss, and bowed over it until his perfumed curls came very near the fate of the Mechlin ruffle already sacri¬ ficed in tho cause. And then not another word was spoken as the pair paoed back again along the gravel walk and through tho evening odors, and in through the honeysuckled porch to the littlo narrow passage, which left no turning room for two at once, so that the dame, with apparent inhospital- ity, half-closed the door in the faoe of her guest whilst she opened that behind it and led the way into her usual sitting- room—a parlor dark with oaken panell¬ ing, and bright with the western glow of sunset, and shining with its rows of china bowls, and dishes, and caps and saucers set on the ample ledges of two diamond- pained windows. - And Dorothy tho cook, who had lingered at the door until the gathered household wondered at her un¬ wonted disregard of ths aupper-hour. caught np her pillovr and bustled ronnd with pinched-dp lipa and a face of silent mystery to remedy tho unusual delay. "Kitty tumbled up-stairs this after¬ noon," laughed Nan the dairy-maid, "and there was a lore-letter in my ohamber- candle laat night. Dorotby.^ou are wise in omens, you know; what does it fore¬ bode?" And pretty little Kitty blushed rosy ed, and dared not look up at Thomas the serving man, who sat by her side,' whilst every eye turned on the pair, forgot to note the extra pursing of Dorothy's lips or the sagacious shake of her far seeing head. And whilst the kitchen folks supped por¬ ridge and milk and cracked jokes at Kit¬ ty's expense. Dame Margaret and the squire played at piquet in the parlor, and talked low words of little meaning to hide the deeper thoughts whioh welled up from their hearls to tremble unspoken on their lips. And the crimson fluah of clouds faded and paled, and the painting of William Cricbton in its black framo over the mantelpiece lost its roseate tint and gathered grey shadows which blotted out ths likeness, and, stretching across the room, veiled the framed sampler on the opposite wall, biding the spreading tree of square many-colored leaves and fruit which flourish thereon, and the signature in full—Margaret Mary Level, aged nine years." And up from amongst the spreading branches of the oak-trees in tho distant meadow, over the box hedge and the sweetbriar-bush, rose a clear full moon, h'gher and higher, higher and higher still, until it threw the shadows of tho vine- leaves framing the eastern window full upon the piquet-table, and nestled them there—soft, quiveriug, fluttering things— in a flood of pale mysterious light. And they had tho table all to themselves for by this time the squire and the lady had finished their game; and Thomas, with respectful unconsciousness, had set before them mulled wine of Dorothy's own making, and cakes, sweet and spiced, dainty and crisp, of madam's own mixing; and, theae discussed, the squire had risen to bid the dame " Good night," and the dame, in her country courtesy, had meant to speed her,departing guest, and having first shut him into the narrow passage in like manner as she had before shut him 011^ they had both stood together in the little porch, and, tempted by the beauty of the moonlight path, they had wander¬ ed down to the wicket-gate again, and stood there, looking down the road white with moonlight, and bordered by the dark, silent shadows of beech, and elm, and tall, gaunt poplars. Looking down the road, as we have said, silently embalming the memory of the hour in the dewy fra¬ grance of the night, wliisperint; low words now and then out of the heart silence, thesquire, in all thc manly tremor of a puro, true love, tbe dame in a sweet em¬ barrassment, coyly blushing, girlishly toy¬ ing with the locket at her throat. .Smile,maidens of eighteen, sneer young men of twenty, at this picture of a mid¬ dle ageti gentleman of five-and-forty and a inature lady of thiriy five making lovo with all tho Tomance and all the sen¬ timent which you falsely imagine to be the monopoly of your own spring-tide.— Hearts don't grow old as early as you sup- pose; life is not lived out at twenty-five: calm common-place does not set in after the fifth lustre; the rampant pulses of life do not leal-n to beat with monotonous regularity, nor the " sweot bells " of im¬ agination to chime in measured cadence, beforethe hair has lost its color and the eye its fire; nor until the feeble limbs are content to tread tbe downward path, and to look for rest at tho bottom of the hill. No! Love is doubtless beautiful in the poet's dream and tho painter's fiction : in the golden Hush of youth, with flowing locks and sparkling eyos, with softly-tin¬ ted cheeks and forms of graceful beauty. But it is beautiful too, with beauty of another kind, when it pours the balm of consolation into the wounds of some half broken heart, when it casta a sunset glow over tho close ofa longand toilsome jour¬ ney, when it rises, in the old fahle of the phenix, from the ashes of a dead joy ! " But," you will say, " these two had loved and been happy once. .Just that. They Iiail loved truly and fondly; they had faithfully livetl in their duty; they had mourned deeply and sin¬ cerely. The Eunof theirlives had set in tears, ifc seemed to them, never to rise again. But their's is a dawning morrow to the darkest night of grief. Daybreak had come to them-:-agray, cloudy dawn which promised little, and even from that little they had tried to hide their tear stained eyes, pained even by that dim, murky, light. But, r.ialgre eu.v, the day wore on, the light waxed stronger and clearer, the clouds lighter and lighter ; the sun came out—it shone upon them, and—they stood together at the wicket-gate, as we have said. Aud their love had a quality in it which is wanting in yours—a tender refrain, a sweet echo of long-forgotten music, a mys¬ terious blending of memory and hojie.— Oh! depend upon it, sparkling las the fresh novelty of your j'oung love is, there is nothing in it which can match with this! . Are you angry still, you maiden with earne.t eyes, who have taken your stand upon fidelity, whose motto is "us/jue udji nen," who pour out from your fresb, ro=y lips such beautilul theories on the same key-note ? Well, ; well. Is it not true that you have touched a chord which lies hidden, however deep, in all our hearts J Have wo all not started in life with the same beautiful theory which has faded before tho experience of life, although we clung fondly to it, disputing every inch of ground with Nature, the healer of wounda, the restorer ot peace, and, half-wonderingly half sorrowfully, looking baok, after all, at the diflerence between what we would be and what she makes ua? How is it that we still listen with a se¬ cret warming of admiration lo the tempt, ing dogma we know to be so unsound ? How is it that we cherish, in the teeth of our e.xperiencc, a certain unconfessed, unconscious hope that, after all, the en- Something of ths 9iuh of lore and happi¬ ness had i faded oat of her face, and a shade of {^rave thoaghtfulness had taken ita place,'^ as she set down the light on the mantelpiece, under the portrait of Wil¬ liam Crichtoti, and, leaning there upon her roundj white arm, she stood looking up at the [face of her dead husband, not regretfully, with no pang of self-reproach ---with a shade of gentle sadness, it is true, such as must always come with the memory ot the long^lost after all the bit¬ ter heart-pain has been stilled—with ten¬ der eyes undimmed by tears, with loving remembrance she looked fearlessly at the shadow of the past. Not a shadow to. her—a realized prea¬ ence, to which she murmured in spoken words the story of her new happiness.just as in the old time she has carried to bim all her joys and all her sorrows, for his sympathy and companionship. And there she lingered, heedless of the passing moments, until Dorothy, whose function it was to lock^the door and extin¬ guish the lights, ventured, tired and slee¬ py, upon a gentle reminder of tha late" ness of the hour, and had the satisfaction of seeing madam safe in her bedchamber at last. Safe in her bedchamder, it is true, but not to sleep. The waters had been stirred too deeply, and the calm would not come yet. Up from the troubled depths of memory came troopin half-forgotten words and look, and scenes, all strangely vivid, strangely real. And as she sat there, be¬ fore the'oval mirror on her dressing'table, she lived over aj,ain her life whioh had ceased to be. Waking from her dream of memory, as tho one silvery stroke of tho quaint little clock in the corner told the flrst hour of a new day. Dame Margaret cov¬ ered her face with her hands and burst into tears. And as whilome in the par¬ lor below, the red gleam of the dame's lamp struggled with the pale beams of the tranquil moon. Surely, surely even so are" the things around us often but emblems of the hidden life within 1 SOHESTIO TYBAITKT. LEaAL.NOTICES. GOD'S LOWLY POOK. Dark are their destinies, Xflmcloss their miseries. Count not their frailties, Whilo thej endnre. When, frith imploring hand, Thiy at your threshold stand. Speak to them kind and bland--^ God's lowly poor. 0 ye rich one's of earth ! AVhcQ at your blaiiag hearth, Feasted with wine and mirth, Think of God's poor. Ont in a world of woo, Out whoro thc tempests hlow, Only tbemselTCE may fcnow What tiioy endure. Tearful and dark alway, Onward through Hfe thoy stray, Comfort them yu who niay, , Still thoir sad moan ; . And thegood God whri planned All things in wisdom _ grand, Ye, in that brighter Litnd, pTct shall enthrone , Bark arc thulr misoriei3| Namclo's their agonies, Count not their fralltties. While thoy endure. i 1^.^ TEACKINGS OF AfT OAK STICK. In a certain great city, says a popular writer, I bought a little sheaf ol walking sticks, of.yellow varnished oak. These I conveyed by laud and sea, till they reach¬ ed the spot where they were to be alloca¬ ted among tbe individuals who were lo use theni. One stick, very large, ynwiel- dy, and uncomfortable, fell to myself. It had a great thick handle, crooked, and set on atia most awkward angle. I found it at first very uncomfortable to w.alk wilh. But in a few days roy hand got ac- ciotomod to it, und I camo to like the stick very much. To others, unaccusto¬ med to it, it remained awkward as before. That olti oak stick taught me a lesson, and I gratefully record my obligation to it. The lesgon was: Not tu be angry with people for preferring their own ways, aud for declining to let you drive them into other ways which are perhaps absolutely better; ior these persons may have grown so accustomed to the oltl waya that the oid waj's are best to them, if not best in themselves or in the judgment ol' a disin¬ terested spectator. Preference is a rela¬ tion between us and the things i>referred —the.resiilt of use. Let peopio be happy in thoir own way. My yellow stick, the worst possible to raany, is truly the best to me. Now I owe this to it'. that it has cast a certain dignity about many little habits and oddities of manner, in various good men, nt which in my tliougtless ig¬ norance I was ready to laugli. Eipeoially it has tought me to regarti with respect the little ways, if not in themselves ofTen- sive, of old people. It would be a terri¬ ble thing to them to change the ancient way. So, if it makes them happy, let them look for a long time at the outside of their letters, wondering from whom they came, and don't you petulantly tell them that the best way to "ascertain that faot is to open the letter; let them twirl their thumbs antl enjoy their like inno¬ cent pleasures; it would be terrible and cruel to push them out of tha dear old ways. Theold familiar faces may not be the prettiest faces, but they are faces we like best t-o see. It is these little knobs and knots which make the walking stick of life fit the aged hand, and to cut tfaese of would be to put the whole thing out of gear. i>»a> Dawson's .4.le.—The following, says the Germantown Telegraph, is too good to be lost, although it occurred some years ago in Germantown, in a hotel not many miles from the railroad : " Will you give me a glass of ale, if you please ?" asked a rather oeedyish-looking person,iandan old but well-brushed coat, and a mosl too shiny hat. It was produced by the bar-tender, creaming over the edge of the tumbler. "Thank ye," said the reoipient, ns he placed it lo his lips, and said: " This is very fine ale-,-very. Whose is it?" "It is Dawson's, ch? Wcli, give us thusiastic dreamer may yet vindicate the n smother glass of it." porished aspirations of somo higher na-'l ^^ "¦** ^°^^ '' """^ holding it up to the ture within us—may yet realize the theory whcih we have reluctantly relinquished? Is it not all a rising up of tho immortal within us against its mortal incumbrance; Bgainst the weakness of the flesh and the lawa which are made for tho flesh's weak¬ ness, just as it rises against sorrow, or sick¬ ness, or death itself—those morlal masts against which, being subject, we yet re¬ volt? But the dame has waved her last adieu, although we did not see it; and now she wends her way slowly back to the house, and, meeting Thomaa at the door of the little parlor, ahe takes the silver <»indle- stick from his hand and entera aione.— The moonlight still lies in chequered panes upon the fioor, still nesteLi in mov¬ ing shadows upon-the piquet-table, the redder light of her taper struggling with but not quenching, its pale, tranquil ray. light and looking through it, the con¬ noisseur said: " 'Pon my word, it is superb al e—m perb !-^clear as; Madeira. I must have some more of that. Give me a mvg of it." Theimugwas furnished; but before put. ting it tohis lips the imbiber said : " 'Whose ale did you say this was?" "Dawson's," repeated the bar-tender. Themug waa exhausted, and also the vocabulary of praise; and it only remained for the appreciative gentleman to say, as he wiped his mouth and went toward the door: " Dawson's ale, is it ? I know Dawson very well—I shall see him soon, and will settle with Aim for two glasses and a mug of bis incomparable brew! Good morn¬ ing 1" Balzac and Thaokery hava both jgiven a most touching picture' .of the patience under domestic tyranny, which we; shall extract not only as a campftrison^bt their opinions, but also as an eirei^J^t speoi- men of the similarity of their styles, which may be seen by the most cursory' exami¬ nation. In Balzac's "Lys dans la Vallee' there occurs the following passage: " What weakness! What impotence in^human justice I It only avenges open acts. Why on the one hand, should you punish with death and shame the mur¬ derer who slays at a stroke, who general¬ ly surprises you in slumber, and sends you to sleep forever, or who strikes sud¬ denly, and spares you the agony ? And why, on the other hand, should you ae. cord a life of happiness and esteem to the murderer who pours the gall drop by drop into the soul, and under-mines the body to deslroy it ? Oh, the number of of unpunished murderers! What compla¬ isance for elegant vice 1 What acquittal for homicide caused by moral persecution ! " I have seen many such victims who are as well known to you as to me.— Madame da Beausesnte, who went a few days before my departure to Normandy dying! The Duchesa of Langeaisis com¬ promised, Lady Brandon brought to Tor- raine, to die in that humble house where Lady Dudley staid for two weeks, and slain by what a horrible catastrophe!— Who did nol know that poor young lady who poisoned herst If, overcome by the jealously whioh, perhaps, was killing Ma¬ dame de Mortsauf ? Who has not trem¬ bled at the destiny of that charming young girl who, like a flower stung by a gadfly, perished two years of married life, a victim to her own vituous ignorance— the victim of a miserable wretch, to whom Bonquerolles, Montriveau de Marsay give the hand of friendship, beoause it suits their political projects? Who has not palpitated at the recital of the last mo¬ ments of that woman, whom no prayer could unbend, and who would not see herhnsband again, though she had so nobly paid off his debts ? " The world and science are the accom¬ plices of those crimes for which there is no court of justice. It seems that no one dies of chagrin, of despair, of hidden mis¬ eries, or of fruitless hopes. The new nomenclature bas ingenious wordsj to ex¬ plain everything. Gastric fever, peri¬ carditis, the thousand maladies of womau serve as a passport for funerals, escorted by hypocritical tears, which the hand of the notary wlli soon dry up. Is there at the bottom of this unbappiness some law of which we have no cognizance ? Is there in existence a strong venomous life which battens upon gentlo and tender creatures ? Mon Dieu! do I then belong to a raoe of tigers?" Compare this passago with the follow¬ ing, taken from ''The Nswcomes;" - '! Do you know,. gentle and unsuspi- cibus'neighbqrs, or have you ever reck¬ oned; as you'have made your caleulation of society, how many most respectable husbands help lo kill their wives, how many respectable wives aid in sending their husbands to Hades ? The wife of a chimney swi^ep or a journeyman butcher comes shuddering before a police magis¬ trate, her head bound up, her body scar¬ red and bleeding with wounds which the drunken ruffian, her lord, has adminis¬ tered. A poor shopkeeper or mechanic is driven out of his home by the furious ill temper of the shrill virago his wife, takes to the public house, to evil courses- to neglecting his business, to the gin-but¬ tle, to delirium tremens, to perdition. Bow street and policemen, nnd newspa¬ per reporters, have cognizance and a cer¬ tain jurisdielion of these vulgar matri¬ monial crimes; but in politer company how many niiirderous assaults are there by husbantl or wife, where the woman is not felled by the actual fist though she stag¬ gers and sinks under blows quito us cruel and effectual—when, with old wounds yet unhealed, she strives to hide under a smiling faoe from the world, she has to bear up and to bo strif.ken down, and to rise to her feet again under fresh strokes of torture ? Ifyou were acquainled with the history of every family in your street, don't you Know that in two or three ofthe hoiues there arcsuch tragetlies have been playing V Is not the young mistress of No. 20 already pining at her husb.ann's desertion; the kind master of No. 30 racking his fevered brains, and toiling through sleepless nights, to pay for the jewels on his wife's neck and the carriage out of which she ogles Lotharia in the Park! The fate under which man or ¦womau falls—blow of brutal tyranny, heartless desertion, .weight of domestic care too heavy tp bear—are not blows such as these constantly striking people down?" _0no ideas seems toj have struck both tliese writers forcibly—that in the sum total of the happiness of life woman gets the lesser s'narc. Compare the following passages. Balzac, in'" Eugenie Grandet," says : " In every situation woman has more causes of grief than man,»and suffers more than he. Man has his strength and the exercise of his power ; he is busy, goes about, occupies his attention, thinks, looks forward to the fulure, and finds consola¬ tion in it; but woman stays at home, re¬ mains face to face with her sorrow, from which nothing distracts her; she descends to the very depths of thelabyss it has open • ed, measures it, and often fills it with her vows and tears. To feel, to love, to suf¬ fer, 10 devoto herself, will always be the text of the lifo of woman." Thackeray recognizes the sentimentful- ly in tbe foUowing : " Oh, you poor women ! Oh, you poor secret martyrs and victims, whose life is a torture, who are stretched on racks in your bedrooms, and who lay your heads down on the block daily at the Jdrawing room table! Every man who ivatches your pains, or peers iato those dark pla¬ ces where the torture is administered to you, must pity you and thank God that he lias a beard. " I know few things more affecting than that timorous debasement and self-humil¬ iation of a woman. How she owns that it is she, and not the man, who is guilty! How she takes all the faults on ber sido! How she courts, in a manner, punishment for the wrongs which shehas not commit¬ ted, and persists in shielding the real cul¬ prit ! It is those who injure women who get the most kindness from them." AUDITOE'S HOTICE. Aisigned Bstate ot John W. Gross of Ephrata tbwssMp. - nPHP undersigned Auditor, appointed JL toi^'J"?"" •ic.pUon.to tho aocoaw. and du- Mtalo IhB balanOB romaUitas In lbs biadB of Mariln OroBB,thi AvSgan,toaad amons tbosaligsilventi¬ tled to tba same, will Bit for tbat purpose on Uarcb 10 18S5 at 10 o'clock, A. M., In the Ubrarj Boom of iho OoartHonse,in lhe Clt7orLaoc9ster, wbere all nar- B cna InterSBtacl In said distilbatlon may attend J. B. iiUfllAH, feb 16.4t.13 AndllJr. ADMINISTBATOBS JJGTICE. Eitats ot Thomas HoCaaslaad, late of Cole¬ rain township, decoased. LETTEKS of administration on said estate bavia; bflan grantad to tbo nnderaigaed, an psrsonB Indabtad tbarato ara requastad to make Im¬ madlata aattlamant, and those baviog claims or de¬ mands agalnet tha sama. will presant tham withont dalay for aettlamant to tho nndaralgaed. THOS. BTEa, CHAUES K. McDonald, feb 15 Sl'lO AdmlnistratorB. ADMINISTEATRTX NOTICB. Eitate ot JTeremiali Diehl, lata of East Hemp¬ fleld twp, dec'd. LETTEBS of AdminiBtration on said estate having beeu granted to tha aadarilgaed, all persons Indabted thereto ara reqnestod to maka Im- mejlata aattlamant, aad theaa baring elalma or de¬ mands against tha same will present them vltbont de¬ lay for BH-.tlement to the nnderslgned, r.!6ldlae In said township. UAHY nmuL, feb 11 6t 12 Administratrix. ADDITORS' NOTICE. Estate of Hichael Uliich, late of Ephrata township, deceased. THE undersigned AuditorSj appointed to dlstrlbate the balance ramalalng In tbe bands of JaramUb Uohier and Simon Slohlar, administrators with tha Win aanaxad of eald .Michael Ulrlcb, dec'd, to and among thase legallj entitled to tha same, wlh attand for that pnrpasa on Friday tba.Ird day of .March 1853, atio o'clock, A. .M., In lho Library Room ot tho Court IfonEc, In the CUy of Laaeaatar. when aod whera all paraoas Interaslad la said dlstrlbutlon^ay allend. D. a. BsaCTr51.1N, A. BbiY.MlKBl!. r. MinTiMHiirrLBB, fab 8-11-ia indllora. AUDITOE'S NOTICE. Estate of Ahraham Fry, late ot the boroagh of Hount Joy, deceased. THE undersigned Auditor, appointed to distribute Lha balanea remalalog in iba bands ol Aaorel Garber, admlnistraior of said decaasod, to aad among iboaa l.-gally eatitled to tbo tamo, will eit for that purpose on 'Wednesday, Slh of !d;treb, at ¦! o'clock, p. m.. In tba Llbrarj Hoom of tha Court Houee, In the OUy of Lancaster, whl ra all persona Inlereoted in Bald dlstrlbatlon may attead. F. H. BIADFfZR, feb 8-11-12 .AcdtJor. FINANCIAL. TaBASXTBY DBPAETMBKT. Office op 90MprBoij.BB op thb CoKSBaor, I Waaaiaaiox, Sec. 30,1861. { WHEREAS, By satisfactory evi- denes praBentsd to the unditBlgnBd, It bas b«fa toad* to &pp«ar tbat '* TBS FIRST Sf ATION AL B *SK OF HOUNT JOT," In tba borongh of Mount Joy, In tbo con«7 of Laneuter, aad State of Penntylvania, bas been daly orjiaalEeil under sod aeeardlng to tbo requiramenta of the Act of Congreaa entitlad " An Act to provide a National Currenoy, lecnred by a pledge orUaited States Bonds, and to prorlda for tbe circnia¬ tion and redemption theraof, approTad JnoeS, 1&Q4, and has compiled with all the piovlslooQ of aald Act reqnlrad to bo compiled -wMb bofora oommenelns tba buatniie^ of DasklDg under said Act. Kow therefore, I, HDQH McCULLOCH, Comptroller of tbe Ourrunoy, do hereby oertlfy tbat "THE f IRST NATIONAL BANK OF MUUNt JOT," In the Boroagh ofMount Joy, in the County of I^ncaBter, and Ststa of Pennsylvania, is authorlzsd to oommence tbo bnti* nesa of Banking under tbe Aet aforeEald. In Teatimony TTberrof, ¦Bltneas ray handand aaal of Office thU iiOth <Jay of December, ISQl. C Sasl ofthe Comp-) { troller of the \ ( Currency. ) HUGH HoCULLOOH. ComptrolJer of the CDiiaBoj. Janll 2ai •« FABMEBS' ITATIOXTAL BANK of Iianoaster) DESIGNATED DEPOSITORY OF THE UNITED STATES. THIS BANK IS PREPARED TO FURNISB 7 3-10 TREASURY KOTES IN LAHGK OE SMALL DfclNOMINATIOKS. ''PHEY present advantages over any IL other Qovernment Lnane, beciubi: they cxn bg bad at PAR, nnd are convertible at Qaturlly into 5-20 Oold Be.«ing Six por cent. Bonaa. For farther If formation in regard to tba abora, or any other United Statea Loanii, apply at this Bank. E. II. BUOWN, J'.n*15.7t-10 Cashier. PBOFESSIONAL. SOIiDIEBS* BOimT£BS. BACK PAY, PHIZB MONSY. And all otbec War Clalmi. P£NBI0N3. For ,Widoirs,Motfian,'S[BteTB, Brothers and CbUdren of deceasad Soldiers, Jl^ CoUeoted Without Delay at Reasonable Bates "SO. PAY DUB PSIBONEES OF WAR Promptly collaotad and paid OTer to thalr wlT&s and families. Particular attention paid to all bnslnesB connected Trlth tbe army or any of tbo Departmenta at Washlagton. XS' ^o chargea made until CUIma are collected.'Ctl Accounts of Executors, AdmlnUtrators, Gu&rdlana TrmtecB, Assignee*, 4c., correctly made out. Deeds, Wills, Releases, and all kinds &f Legal and otbar Writings axecntod with groat care, at tbe shortest notice. For qnalificatl(^n^ftc.,tbB subscriber respectfully re' ftarsto tba members of the Iv^al profeision, and buet uaEB men generally tbroagbout the Couniy. All couunnnicaUans by ma>lwlli rec'lve Immediate attention. THKO. W. HEHB, SurTeyorand Couyeyancer. 07nai.'No. 16 N'orth Dnke-streat, Laneast«r, PenuA. nnder Prorost Marshal's Offiee. nov 9 ly St MBDICAL. Pensions^ Boimties and Back Pay. FOR Soldiera, tlieir "Widows, Children and Parents. Aud alao, Prlra Monay, Back Pay at PrlEOuera of War, and all otber Clalma sgilnat the Qovernment collected promptly. J. B. KAUFMAV. Att3rney-sl-Law, Laocaater, Pa. N. B.—Ctisrces Teasonahle, and no rhari^e unless BUccoBsfuL EJ* Money ailTsncsd to poor claimantt. [aov6Iy"S0 \i\ AUDITOR'S NOTICE. Estate of Barljara Hoffman, late of the borougb. of StraebuTgi deceased. '"J'^HE undersigned Auditor, appointed ^ to dlstrlbate tbs balance ramainlni; iu ib a hinds .]f Samael V. Boivor, Exacntor, to aad among tbosa le- sally entitloil to thu Same, will sit lor lhat purpose on Tuesday, March 7tb, at 2 o'clock, P. \T., lu tbo Library Boom o( the Court House, In ttie Cily of Lancaeter, VFbeiQ att parione Intereated la said dlstribntlon m&y attond. AMOS II. MYLIN, feb 84.12 .inditer. ADMINISTIlATOR'S NOTICE. Bstate of Daniel Howard, late of East Done¬ gal townahip, deo'd. LETTEKS of Administration on said estate baylug b?eD gr^tnted to tbe undeislgood, ail per ons indebted tbereto nre reque)>tt!d to mako Im¬ mediata tetttameot, und tboEo having claims or de¬ mands agaiuat tbe same t;iI1 prosent lhem vritbout de¬ lay for suttlament to ibo uud&rBigat>r*, residing lu s&id township. HENUY PBK'lZ, rul'ilrg Iu BLiytows, Adminletrator. fab S u 12 FIHST NATIOSTAI* BAWK OF Strasburg, Pa. FIXANCIAL AGENT AND DEPOSITORY OF THE UNITED £TATES. the NOTKS, luicn areeaavsrtlbleatmatarity into SIX t'EltCSVT -20 BONDd. U. S. 10-40 lionds oo band Tor a-ilt;. t: M.JiBi,KMAN, Fdbrusry let, ISE5. Ca«bi»r. fab l-lMI EECKIVES Subscriptions for VewTUKEEYEAB^ 7 3-10 TItBAf UliY NC Xaneaeter County HationalBank.^ Janoaet 12,1865. THE Directors have ttiis day called in the remainioK instaiuient of Five dollars ptr Eb:tre On the capital si^ck of this Bank to be paid lu on or beford tbe lath dav orPebruarv nezf. W. L. VKIPBIt, sDlStdQ Cashier. FIHST KATIONAL BA-NK. LAN0.48TEK. ) January 2filh, IffiS. j ^HIS Bank will pay ioterest on CER- JL TJPlCATE.^of DKPOjlTattbo following rates: 5 months ii per cent, per annum. 6 « 4 " • *' 12 " i •¦ HORACE R.^THVOK, jaa-ii tfio CaBbiar. J Washihotos. D. C, Ho. 4iX Ninth ft.' ( Gle7KI..\5D, > blo. No. L Lymaa'fl Blocic. SOTICE. WHEREAS, On motion of Wm. Au^. Atlsf, Ktq., Attoroty for ?t'iitioBare,"»n cpplicatlou has boeu tunde lo tbo Court of ComDi'nn Pleaa of Lancaater oounty, to grant and decree &n al- tofaticn Or amendmi-ntof 2i£t>f>n ;o, of tiio Arti^h-s of IscorporAtlon cf '-Thi: Protestant Lpiscfiasl Cbnrcb, comraoaiy Mn.;dBan','&TCtiurphan.J ^cbtv.l,in Chiircb- toffu, CcrnErvoij townsbip. niid Ccanty of LxnctPtor." tba eamo biTiap bpca erected i'. bcidy pi.Hi? by Acr. cf Assembly, passed .Mnrch Ist, A. I'., 17R(i Uo It feuown tiat.tho cijd Court-B-Ul on iliu Third ZtTou^jAy !« Apdl 'sestV I6i.'0, at lu o'clock, ¦%. n., if no iiDi'i.:it;a: cnuso lo eliovvu to lhc conlrnry, d-^crce, dsclare aad grnnt tb.it tbe alteration or timoudinc-ut, sj rV. fc;ti\ and :>p;ilied iilt thali be and hvccia*! a j-ait ol tlie Articles oi lnco:- paratloa oi said Gbatcb. Joa::? PKLDOMr.iD:.Ji:. ffb 4 Lf II iVoiI)ii[iJt.-»rv. Interest on Deposita. FiakT Hatiokal Bi,.vK of Marietta, ) Janaary 23..1fi(i.7. \ FIVE Per Cent. Interest will be paid for Deposits mtda w^ltb this EroIc payable In one year AMOS BOWMAN, .itn. 2.=i-2o-10 CaahJer. C. G. BBXrca & PBSSTOW, AUTHORIZED ;arm¥ and navy agents. Orpiass: PUBLISH THE ARMY HEKALD, AND COLLECT PEHBIONS. BOTTHTY, BACK PAT, PEIZE MONKI.DlicliM^'d and lU'.lgned OFFICBHS FAY, al d aU othsr WAU CLAIMS Theftino Uounty dna eol ilers diBchargad for wonnde received in battle C' Uecled vi\Vv..ut delay, W'E pay especii 1 attentior to claima lu whicb otlior att orneya bava faf led, or whiob bava boen Mmponded, of vt bleb theru aro teua of tbou- c&nda. We hay« already coU(>cted and p&ld over to uoIdi»:r4 and tbeir belra a\«r S^'jO.OOO, aod are paying tbouBandy dally. We aecf.ro Vansicnn for ttn dollars, and collect Bonnty aod Ba ;k Pay For tau per c»nt., and no pay until offer wa bav* fiarceaded Tbe AauT i^EBALD la publiabed monthly, and li de- TOtad lo tbs Intereuts of t.io aoldier and bla belralo wbom it la invaluabU. Wi ite na and we will r^ad yoa « oopy free, or for thirty cc^iis we will aond you by ro¬ turn of niail a fioe engraved tlntod likeneSH (Albam size} of Llaateiiant Oent cal Qrant, and tba Atur HsBALD for one yeai. To parsona Banding a clnb gl faurTD wiU^ead. Uj preit.tum,&o add! tiun i^tlilfOBeiiB aud tbe Uebaj.d for one y< ar^ and for each additional aubaeriber aa addltlon&lllItoaoBH to tha getier upof the Clnb, eo tbat a persoa r^ndiog ns a Club of ten T'ill receive, bimself, fet-rn likes Essar ^nd tbe Arjit Hbkald for oauyi.s and for any stbai aumber lu tbo uaoiu ratio. refer" ENCEa. Wahhisoto.h, D. 0., April 18.1864. Vfe tilto pleaanre lu asying ibat C, Q. Ilruce, eaq., baa complied with tbe n<t ofCoogreea antborlzing eer« tail psrsons to net aa Arm> and Navy Agentti for tbe collcctlonof war olsims agitust tbo OoTercn:Qitt,Rnd to racommand hln lo all pe .'sona that bava claims thay wish collected promptly. Vnited Utales SenaloTM—Ba ijusin F. fV'ade, Johu Sber¬ man. Members of Congress—Z. R- Eckluy, Wm, Johnat&n, Wm. B. AUUon. j»l-iy-23 DR. R, A, WILSON'S TONIC CATHAllTIC AND Anli-Ofspeplic anil KsadaciiB ¦ AS A TONIC THEY agree with the most delicate Btomaeh, ramorln^ NaDnafl. Fain acd DeblUtr from tfaator^aa. aad throcgh it impart tcne sod vigor to tha whole sjBtera. AS A CATHARTIC. Thay inflaence oiore tbe motory acd less tba Rfcernliig power of tha bowels tban any otbar comblnatlua In common use. FOR DYSPBPSIA, And Ita tan thousand Inconvenience, from a alight In¬ digestion aad fihallotf cbeeic to extrame anueiitlOQ sod depreision of fplrltfl, or a ccnflrmad oaee of ttielanobo- 11a iulta moat FC^ravated form—tbe-e Pilla are eonO- dantly reeommaudedaaa aure cnie, If poTDeverlAgly useda HEADACHE OF ALL KINDS, Snch as Sick Haadaeha, ilecTous Headacbe, Shauma- tlc Headache, HllloM Headache, (stupid Headarb*. Cbronic Hoadttche.Tbrobblnst Hoadacbtt—Is promptly rellaved by tho nsi of thesfl Pllla. THEY NEVER FAIL, In removlog NAUSSA aud UEADAGHE, to which FKUaLBS ate bq subject, LIVEK COMPIiAINT—TORPID LIVER, Use tfaaPllUlnalterxtlffudoeeitor along time, or nn¬ tll tbe or^an is arousad. Iniarmltting lb« uh'j of tbo Fills now and tben, Is tha belter plan. INTEMPERANCE, Any one who Is bo nnfortunata as to eat too lacoti, y save bimaelf a flt of .^pt/plaxy, or otber eurlooi wtto- tlutnciiH, by immediately taking a I'lli, THEY ARE A FA.MILY PILL, Aud a box should atWrty<t bo kept to tbe bouw. Tboy are agood ?lll to be talion bt--fura cr .after a hcaity dinner. . -^ ¦¦ FOR LITERARY MEN, BTDDENTS, Delicate Peraalai!. and all persons of wi dealary bablla, ibey are luvalnable as a L.^XATIVi': improvin(,-tbaAppeUt<?; giving TOSS acd VIOOU tft tha DiK^AtlTrt OTjaaF, and renloring tbb natural ela.'itic- Ity aad drength of tbe wbole eystoia. TUEY MAY DE TAKEN AT ALL TIMES, With tKRV'LCTealeiy.witbontmiWDgaDy pbanen ot diet: AMD THK ABrBNCS OFaNT RHAOHEKaBI.S T '.STS RBSDKES IT EASY TO ADMINIBTES TIIkM TO childhk:i'. I'repared and a^ld br B. I, 7AHNJ;gT0CK & Co., Solo ProprietoiB, 7^^ 7S Wood and 91 foartb BtT<>>ttA, Pittsburg. Pa. Sold by Drngglsta and Medlclct DosJ^rs generally. my'J l-ty-2tj B. L. FAHiNESTOCK'S XT 3E2 E^lfeflLXJE^tTJ^:^: IT. S. fiTAKPS. ^ General assortment of United Statea XY\, lifcvoQOH StJimpf, are cn handaud fiir fall) at Goverumeut ra*es, by ths lulauillnsuracce aad Duposlt Cump;',ay, Ci:ntrt» ^-'fiuari-, liincisltr. .*.9- Ageui.-i it-.t vh" iiub:^ui it>tr. J. K.AnKXANIiKIl. 21-tWl n TT. .S. AniiREOT. K23ED, HJIiliKDSiiBOH & CO Cc.rr.tr o East /lint^ and Duke Si-'sKt, LAKOiSTKii, PA. CONFECTIONS. A. B. WITMEfi, Conuty Snrreyor, Bepatjr* Coroner] Jnutlce ol the Ibeace and Conveyancer* A LSO irives particular attentio" cu (\. CLERKiitG SALES OP EE AL AND PEP .- k L PROPSETY, at tny diatanee wlthlc tha co» ¦ Or- dtrrs from a dlstanco promptly sttoddad lo. Ofllca luMasortpwjioblp, Laacaster coanty ' jnamtU nortb of Safo K»rbur, on tbe Lancanter road. AudrriiB fare ff-irbor Poatofficb. ciji9lv-;i il. W. SHEWS, ADMINISTRATOR'S KOTICK EaEato of ISartin H. Kendig, lato of "Wast Hempfield twp., doa'fi. LETTEUS of AdaiiDiitratica on said Mtate bavins boau granted to tbn cudsn-Ignod, all prrsDns lodebtoi Ihoruto arc n iinerto 1 lo mal;>-. lm- mvdistc settlemeat, i.ad thusa l);.vf:]gcIi!iaiA cr da- manda aziltiat tho satne will prc'-isnt tbeni wUbont dt¬ lay for fli'illcmeat to tb j MaK^ir.\f.x«¦!. r-cidlng In e:.\-l iovrokhlo. JzCO:( KiK.iO, fib 4 6: U AdciiuisL-.*L0r ADATiNisfRAf6ii':i KO'ITCE^ Estate of Jolin Killhofner, lato of East Earl township, dtjseascd. LETTE US of administratioa on stud estsUi liaviug bpea grani'-I t'l tbg ir.dL-rsi.mrJ. all parsona indebted lber«j;y art* rrtitiest'^d t-i iriAVfi ImmadiatK (ettlement, .".ad inotri) b.tvlcg ctniuiP or demanna aaalost tho s-imo will pr.::tajt thi^m vltb- nut dalay Ior »otlIam«&t lo tlja nB;i*r.>i\'E'i!,', rosidl.'iir la said lownship. DAMLL f. GSliT, J.tn 21 6t».^ >.drr.jn!!fliar-r. A TTOKJN'EY ATLAW.—Ofioe witll XA. 0, J. Dltf&ey, South Qnaaa Btraet, Laucaater, Pa july 3a iyi First I« atiouai Bank of Strasburg, Fa. Fhbbl'aet lat, 1S15. INTEREST paid on "Special Oepodts" at tbf rollowlug ralos:— T. Montba. 3 per cent, par »c:ium. ti Mnnvl'.H, 4 per cent, per .innum 1*2 Months 5 psr coat, per nnnuut. " "' "•¦¦^ leh i-tf-ii . M..8CEB.MAb*, Gaabiur. b^HEED, iilcaKAKISr & CO. Bankers. STILL contiuuo to paj Sptri-vl Depofilt.s: -i rnr cea;. for I maatb. interest on ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. Estate of W, A. Q. TliocapsoUj Iato of the City Lnscastsr, Fa., deceased. LETTEKS of adiuinistratioo on .'saitl tatste havlDg been gTautei! to tbo UQder^Igaed. all persDn.1 IndelitrtJ tberetu are riqueElcd to vif\<f- lia- modtato CEittlftniiiiit, aud t)ic«a bsrin;r rlxlmi or 'Ip- raands againat tho »tn:e willprei«r.t ibaci wUhoutde¬ lay lor nettlement ti thc nndersiiined. reeid;ag in liie City of >ow Vtrli. Wai. i-. 'rnu.Mrftui*', Admlnlfitriilor. Or to his AUorn y. S. II. l.*£IC2, bincsKi.3r citv. jan 21 Ct 9 ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. Efltatd of John Jones, who diad in tho Army, late 01 Ephrata townahip, dec'd. • LETTtiKS of Administration Laving heeu granted to tbo underBignad, all r«rsnim lc- dobted tber8;o aru rtqae>tted to aalcn ImniPdiaie »at- t'meot, and thoee having claims ord«m:'ndii agntQFt thanauio will present tbetn wiibont delayfor i-atile- ni','ut to th'i nn'ier3Ssr.ei:, tealcinc iu F.\i.l lownthi-j. -MAH'J'IX S. c-i;!', ra^HlBS in tald Eptirata township. Jjn2S6tlO Adraiiilatmlor ."i p^r caaS. for d uiootha. \y, " '• ;; " i^y. '•• •' 13 :;o'yar.:J5eUGold,Sl!v3r, ato" all kisds cf Dalted 5tnte.s fcucuritiLtr, feb IMm-lS .MISC .E 1. L A N K 0 U S, 1864 1S6:I:' lS6i B. C. EHBADYj ATTO RN EY AT LA IV. OFFICE with Hon, I. E. Hiester, Uo. SS, Kortii Duke atrent, Lanca-ster. Pa. t^^Soldler'a bounly, bacic pay and'pensions collect- ad withoutdelay. . [inar3t}-<;-JU J. K. AXiSSAHDSH, 4 TTOllNKY AT LAW.—Ofice in x!fl- Dofce Street, oppoeitc th* Court -iocs?, Ijunc^- B. L, PABKESTOC&'S VEBMFllliE. Dear Bir: WatakARiueh pl?aeurft tn a.^eoring >oa that there lano Vermifuge now in uaa tbat we think eqaals youra aa aWOKil DKSTUOBEB. We bavosyld. tt birgaly at relalJ, and with uniform snccesa. We hit DrufEgleta and Phjfllciaiie, and have prMciibed it .'or onr patlosta, and have been woll ^atl^fied wltb lto «! tozte. a.\2TC:i a IJI-'^IIOI'. Itblca, 5". T. B. L. fahestock's worm confections .\t6 vrepart-'d fron tha acHv^rrlnclpla of bla csUbi*- lod Tsimlfnge. Thor ar* put np In a nir* and p«Iar*.- blaft»rm, lOfiuittba faR'isof th.)-fi who cannot coum" iilently take tho Tcrmiruga. Cbllrtrea will lakn theai without troablf. Tbay art* an sflacUra Woriad«troy5'" and may be given lo tho mos?. deliratn child. Propnrcid and wltl by B. 1-. F.'.BNBSTOCS h '> Sole froprittora, 7« and 78 Word acd 91 fonrlh bItm Plttabnrgb.ra. Fclii iiy Drugjrlft* and Mrt^^lcto* Daalara generAlly . I'x. may 2S-!. TBOSO. W. HaSR, QUKVEVOK, Conveyancer aiid Kci-iv- lO ener Oflloe, No. 22 :«orth Duto rtjcet, cpr-ji-lte tha Oourt Hon:;. ;nar2lHiy BAMXTEt IE PHIcS A TTOKNEY AT-LAW, Offioe in S. Xa. DOKE STKSKT, 3 doora o^^azUa L:\thDran Gbcrch. clow 7arnaie' Pant j3al,S.l-tf STOVES, -CUTLEEY. HOUSE FURSriSHmG GOODS, AKD ALL KINDS OV -£&. 3ft XJ "KTCr J^ £2. ^3 . ADMINISTKATOU'S NOTICE. Estate of Qeorge S. Whitehili, late ofthe Ciiy of £ile. LETTERS of Administration on said estate bavlnjj b"*n granted lo lh« unilemlsned, ail peitrns indebted tharvio nre rtquiisted to niahe Im¬ mediate Fettlement. and thoao liaviui; claims or ile- manda asaloet 'hw .laaie wi}| present thnm withnut de- layfor aettlemeat to tliu undfr.'dgiiftd, r-a-idiyr in Ibc Cityof Krie CIIAKLKS 0. iJdlUir, Kriw, Jau. 33. 3SSS, .Idojiui'-Iratnr. jin 23 6C10 U ADJIINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. Estate of Joseph HeiBler, latd of L&ncastor City, deceased. LETTERS of Admiaistration on said estate bavin;; been granted to tbe underMt;nMl, all pttBoua !adubt(-d tfa*trf't(^ uru r^'Cjue-ted io mnii.o im¬ mediate c-Citlement, aod tho-^e bavins claims or demaads agaiust the same «i!l present thtiai without deiay tor bsttleinent to tbe uodDrsii^ued. resJdini; iu l'rc7l>:ouce towBEbip. ' .lOil'a' STltoHil, jau as 6t 10 U Adminiatr.itor. EXECUTOE'S NOTICE. Estate of Mrs. Ann Gealbangh, late of the City of Lancaator, deceased. LETTERS Tcstamcctary on said estate bavlni; upbu graoted to tbe nuderalgs^d. all per* EounIndebted tberetir.re roiuasted to maka Immedi- ate aettlement, acd "hree baving olalmts or dcuiandit against tbn eime will pra>>ent tbem wltbout dehny for eottlement to tht: undereiEjued. rctidipg In ParadliO township. JaCOB FilA.NTi:, Kxecator. febl 6tU TIIE JEW riPU OF DJVliKR 4: GRtlFF, xl'^'/ISH to iiiiona the publie tiiat a ^i V .eood a-fortjarTit "T :iil nrtlcl'jH n-ually liart la Lbe Sa;dw.iiH l;ci'';uf>i)^ ui.tv t'e lia-l attii,> mLU STa!]D, KO. S >:AiT IvISU sTUBST, I.iNCAsTKIt. {late .1. i:, HoB'-elV.) A bbatu of pabllc puiroitago will ho dulv appivciatfd GK'i .'. PI!jL^:R, ¦ dccSma UiUur D. lili'FP ATTORNEY AT LA.W.—OFFICE, DDKEETE2ST,2doorBNortkofthoOonrtaoaio, Lanurstor, Pisan'a. rjcT3-tf-4C BOOPIKG SLATS. I'^ICiiS :^aDT7CEn TO SOIT TEB TIKS8 THE undersigned haying constantly o^ band a fall anpply of Laneastor acd Tork CoaaiJ' K00^'"'3 KLATK, of tbo beat qnalities. wbleb iie la 0J:ii^l^alrecucedprlc9^,a)ld wblcb wlUbopuionbytb aquare, or aold by tbo ton, oa tbo rnoct re&iioattfci Urmi". ALyo. coamaclly on band, an Extra Ligb PEACH BOTTOM SLATS, lutoaded fnr isiatlns on Q'nlcgl<d Koof.>. CavliiK In ny employ tba bo.''t Slatera In tbo markat, ali^TTork willb* warranted lo b* (•xacniod la tba bail mmnar. As thi>?8 qUftUtles of Slalo uto THE 3KSTIN THB KARKET,BnUdo-M.-Ed, olhera will flad U tr tbcir lii terant to call au-i -^ramluo Raraploa, at i-jy cfltcotr. W5: D. S?KKCGKIi'.S w AgrUaUr.ri;l «f.l Seed Wara roira=. GEO. O. Si'SRCREB. ?o.2S Sc^t Kia^-fclr*-t.adoOM VTaiitor tba iToia Houtfl. a)!::-t(nffi. i\ FAMILY BIBLSa, EKGLISH OR GER MAK. largo Stock in various Stylos of AirCTIOHiSBSIHe. BENJ. F. ROWE respectfully in- forwa tbp pabl]» that ha will'attesa !<• Crying Saiaa of Uaal and Faraonal propertr In any part cf tbp ounty. Tboea ivlahlu^ hla nbivuVB are raqueated to apply ta GSaABODtjCLAKESOtT, fijq. at luo ProtbonaUry'F OSco,wbo will promptly attend to the maltsr. LettarfiaddrflKftgd tumeatSmlthvllIsF. 0., Lanoai' ta; County will ha. v>ramptlyat[«adad ta. " ATTBHTIoif ioLDIEKSI SIOO BOUNTY, PENSION, &o CLAI5IS of Soldiers, Seamen, their Widows, Children aud Heirs, for $lCOKoaaty, BacK Pay, )'ei>^iou», Prlie Money, aua all otber elalma &<j;lni>t tbo Goversmnut, wlil reeeivo prompt aad propor attdnliou, by ctillinfc oa, or writlnt; Vt JAMEq BLACK. Attorney at Law, Laucaitar. Fa. N, 11.—Chanios reasonable, and no cbBr.t;e made uo¬ til tbe :):i>nQy la collectea. Uu l-ly*-26 SUBSTITXTTE^AGENbYT' ENROLLED Men wanting Subsiitutes and dubxtitntaii waatlo;; PrlncipalH, ivUl flnd it ti uuinal advaaiai^e to report tbemKt-l%*t:itt'^tbe uadei- aUnnd. liiava b-ea Inanctrt to oifer my smtJccsIu tbia matier ttair mollTe.s of jusiica to the KoMiar. wlio. It ia well knowu got iu tbe vi^^t. Inmany caiiea. culy oD« balf nf tbo money psM by tba }'r]]iclpal, aod aiKO tbatpartle>t'may know wbere to api.Iy, aD<l not depend uplu tbe clunceg tf baiug pli-ked up abi-nt Uotcli*. or npon lh<!*tr(rat r>y ialercblad tuDnorH I will cbar^e a tPunUr fe^cf twenty doilate, (4'.in) In picb c*e«..iDd pay erery caut the principal payn for bli* subbtitnia tnlKtbe handler tha volantatr Kuldier, wbo la proptily eutitlu-d to it. Five Iluadred SnbHtltntesand Ouo Thouf^and quota men [or I, - aud a veaia w:ioted tiumectiKteiy. ASH. if. t'KAh'TZ, No. '2\ Norlh DuVe ftrnct, Lancisaior. V B —Military c!aim3 calJecIe.!, Bouatioi", 1'i-iii.loni, Ac. dfC-Jflffl ^icdiDir, and at moderato pricos. Tor nalu at theKook Store (if .lOHN ISAKU& pON.-r. SQ.y.i, Sorth Quaen fit., Laaeaatar. I'a. jsn 25-.1m-10 EXECUTOR'S NOTICE. Estate of Hannah E. Henderscn, late of SaliS' bary township, deceased. LETTERS testamentary on said estate barisf: faaeu graated to tba uuderaitinod, all poieonalndobted thereto are requistod to mako immd- dlate payment, and thons havis^ clalmitor demanda against tba eama will praaaat tbom for eattlt-mect to the undereicncd, rssidin^ in Saiiflmry lownship. LSVI POWKALL, jan 35 6t • 10 Execntor. EXECUTOE'S NOTICE. Estate of John Boyer, lato of Ephrata town¬ ship, deceased. LETTERS testamentary on said estate haviufr bnen Rranted to tho undersigned, all par- sous ludebted thereto antroqueatud to maku immedi¬ ate s>:ttlomuut, aud ttinse bnving cUlma nr doi'tiuda agaiust the Esme will iiraHent thnm vitbout delny for aeltlssient to the usdtrciKaed, rosidinit In said twn, ItTJUEBN liOTBR. JOHN Jl. KOYER. jan 16 lJt"9 E.ti*cmor-(. a A N D Xi ii; WICK. TIE YAEN AND COTTON LAPS. FOn SJ. LJl A T CONESTOGA. STEAM SULL, .NO. 1 LANCASTKR, PA V. SHRODER, 4: COWPASY, :a:iTCHEIiI*'S SEEISB OP OUT- I.IUE SIAPS. il?o. HTc. 1. HemiepberflF, '' 2. Nortll America, " y. British Provlnwf, 1. D.S..t Jloxier., o. Qontl' America* What waa the next sound Sherman heard? Ossabair. ' STOVES MD HEATERS! o c c w Why is Sherman tha moat gallant Gen¬ eral in the army ? He ruahed acroas the country to save Anna (Savannah.) What is there whioh, auppaaing its greateat breadth to he four inchea, length nine inches, and depth three inchea, con¬ tains a aolid foot 7 A shoe. In some of the Southern hamlets, the secesh are so thin with starvation, that each starvling might properly be called a ghost in Hamlet. An artist who has recently visited Ve¬ nango county, Peontylvania, fer the pur¬ pose oi placing ths scenery on canvas. Bays he eonsiders the tnp <^'i2mDrarpaseed. SANFORD'S HEATER FOR BKICK, BOYNTOH'S HEATER FOR BRICE, SANFORD'S rORTABLE HEATER, VULCAN'S PORTABLE HEATER, IMPROVED FIRE PLACE HEATER, OOOKWG RAXGES OF THE MOST AP¬ PROVED PATTERNS.' A OOMPLETB ASSOBTM NT OP mi, FABLoa m mm mt m\n AT TUE IiOWeST CASH FRICES. 49-PArtJ(n]Ur stUntion paid to Uepttilag Ue.ian ana BuitTM, at A.O.PLIHN'6, Houm VurnUblog Store, «it29tr<9n No. U,H<>TtbQ<uiin8tr«t. 6. Eorops, r. Atla, 8. -Ifrlca. II. 0osaalc», I). TliaPhyilMlWorla THESE Maps hayo been thoroughly revlsod aad grcaUv lujproTifd by tho Uoa. D.\Vll> J.. OAMP. Iha rapliUt? Willi irblcli ths nnw {.dition of this perlGS ban beuu Introdocsd ]&to a Lirgn ocubu of Com¬ aon Scbools aBd laHtitotlonsof a btfjtier Stads, Inclad¬ ing TE5 Stato Korinul Schoola Is saifieiont indloatlvH of tbeir groat saparloritj- over any other OatUaa Mapn CAMP'S GEOOUaPHY. Enbraciac tbo Iioy to IfitchoU'ii Sorles of Qatlino >JapB by Oavld n.Caaipe. Principal of the Coaaectlca; Stato Ifornal tichool, aad ^tato tioperiatoadaa; of Coin- inon Scbonlfi. TblB Oeogr iphr be^i prored to bo jnst what la nMded In all oor school", an.i may bo usaa Indcpeooonlly. or in cooaectioa with too " Outlino Maps," wblch corren- pood wltb the maps tn tbia Book. Prlca par alogfa copy, $1.75. Price of the Maj ., per set, InrlndlDg portfolio, and ono copy cf Camp'a Go-nsttphy, $iO.0O. Por eale aC J. IJ. WESTHAEPI?BK'S Cor. Iforth Qusaa ana Oranga Sts. _««Pt tf-4.1 Turnpike Bividead. ¦'^r'HB Managers of the 'Willow Street !• Turnpike Ccmpany, bavodeclan.d a dividond of I'onr per t.ai. payable on doraaad bv IVilllaai Cooper, Agent, at Cooper's Uotel, Lancaster City. J. ."< .1. P. HERB, f=l> 4 3t 11 Treaaurer. CHOICE GROCERIES^ Ho. 18 East King Street, Lancaster. The undersieQcd beg leave to inform tbalr frienda and the pnhlic, tbat tbey have remcved their pkCi of baslness from No. 36 to No. JE East King Street. (Fncce'Bors to John U. akiles.) where tbey will alwaya be prepared to fnrolMb Cbolce crccorles at tbe Lowast Caph Pricos. feb 1 at J1 D. a. A J. 8. liOUSK. SAMUEI. B. COX, W.M. C. McKEOW.X JACOll MILEY. SASTUEIi B. COX & CO. CAESIAOK MANOTACTOREES AMD I'SAtJ- TICAL MECHANICS, Comer of Duke and Vine Sl. iunciwler. Pa., "57" EE? ooaitantly on hand and maau a\ factnre to order CABKIAaKe " 0?BVXK7 EESOaiPnOB. mads ofi the best materials aad by ojcperlaceedl woritman. „ . ' ...... EavlBcbwnongago'ila tbo Carriage making ba-i.- ness/orsome yoars. they foel coufidoai tbat tbs worl Made by theia will be foaud fally oqasl iraol ponsrl.t 10 aay cther made in tho Ststo, either aa to styie, wera. maaahlp or qaallty of materials, and also ia reasona¬ bleness of price. Thty tbrncfora lovlte Ibos.i in waot of Oartlagon, to glvo tbem « «aU beioro parohaslns olsewbere. ... .., The foUowlo! FItSJIIDKS haToboon awardod to tbls ...T^..!.™.... ;_t v..nmtnm bv the I,anctstcr Coonly esiabilebmeat :-A P.-cmlnm by the Lancosler Coanty ?iie .;¦• 1S5S for BEST SDLKY i also, a Pteniam aa-l I?v,r Meia! ;":!.. HUST KHira.;:B.70P SuKC--" ilvor ilsdiil bv the Eistorlcci. Afftloallaiai and ba"lcal lastitute, la Joao, 1S6P; and also by tie .__...-.. .-v,......«>.— Ti^o r..f HRST SHTT'''. Pattoa iBStltat*. la November. 1S5&. for BSST SEIP^'. I^-TOP BOaar aad I'HOTTISQ BnOOY. lr3-?arsoas waatlag carriages caa aeWot rom PIFl' T DIFPE^SMT STYLKS, aU la oao room AUwork maacfactared at thlsestabllshment Li war raated. Repairing of aU klads ooae oa short notice. aor 14-tf-Ol SAitlKL E. OOi 4 CO, OARKIAGK MANUFAOTOKY jToB.HSIU.T DoOICSX, AlsTlCZ & Oo*s., EsUjnsivQ Carriage Manufactory, "W. Orangs at,, noit to the oor. of Prince, KEEP constantly oa hand, and manu- factarn tc» order CAKRIAOEa of every doBcrip- ;ioa , niRtJo cf tJia best luawrials, by '5-'?^? ^ oxporlOQcad &ad cornpotent xror'timon.r^^^'^^^^h^ siboTc bnBlnaon totmaaj y^aro, thoy aro-""'' ...iTiliSt— ecnfidODt thnt the worl: turned ont fcy t'.iem will b« foand eqaBl If uol »ap6rlor to nay other msltfl U tou aoaaty, allher xt rcit«rdn .STTLi:. WOItSMiSSHIi'. he qaaUty of matorliila or prlM. Tholr atock "•i"-'.- BscoQd haad c&rriftjcs 1« tha moit esienaiTS U • BHOOIJ COHK WANTED. TWO or Three Tboasand Pounds Good Brrtom, Corn w«Dt*-d Immedlntoly, for which, Caah wlU 1)t> paid on d(»Uvbry at the LMcaster C nnty VrlBOD. WM. S. SIllHK. feb 4 flt 11 Kaeper. TO MHiIiEES. A Miller who underatanda STONE T)BE85ISG, aad Is well acqniloted with the hatV- neas, irUl hear of a good ailaatlon and atatdy employ- meat, by ftpplylog to the usdhnlSDed. A married man. pnferraa. t'WM. B. filcAlEli ft BON, feb 11 St« 12 LevlstoWB, Pa. 53-Per»onii In want ot anylhUj lu l*^*",""'^"^ pleaHO eall and examlno their work and uecr.aU thalr /ricesboforeporchaaUg .!s«wh»rc. Jiliwork wana- 'tctttr«datthifl oatabllnhment warrant «d. rtrtlctta aaentlon paid to all kind* ft ropahlna. acs Sl-iy-n CiFaIKS! CHAIRS'.! g CHAIRS!!! L CHARLES T. GOULD. S^o. STf North Queen Street, Next Door to Shober's Hotel. KAtrtrFAOTttRXK OJt ALL Kt.TOS OT CHAIBS, BOCKIKe CHAIRS AND BETIEES, At The Very Lowtst Pnces. HE has been engaged in the bnsinos3 for many yeare, and hla work is all oftbe best , UBlitT. rone bat good'"- -iingased • OLD OHAiaS lepal ..j j,jj rtfalxed with despaich. oct 6 ' «"« T[IB iror.LD'9 ARCAT ItUIEDY POa Scrofula and. Scrofulous jDiseasos. Frmn I£mvry Ede*, it nvll'l.'uiiwii -rnercUitnt vf Os- font, y[iih-.\ " I Unvn mild l:irj;« «iii:iiititii-^ ofyour S.\RS\I*A- i*ii.i-.\, itnl never y.-t oiii> Imltlc wliii-li fiiik-d of tlio (li-rfiri-.ieiTi'iiDr.nil ^.ll s:itiisf:n:l»Mi t»tIio.'.!\vIio tonk it. As \'t:»x i\n onr p''<ii«1<' try li.iiii y ii;rriH- iIhto Ii.m lii-en no nu'ilirhn* like it l.t*ion* in our coinmmiity," ErnptioMS, Pimploa, Blotsbea, Pustitloa, Ul¬ cers, Sores, und aU Disoaaoa of tho Skin. I'rom A>'-. It'M. S:tmlt»ii, Jtri.-'tnl, Eit'ihrnA. " I o:iIv <I<i lliv tliif» Id v«in :tii() iIjc iiHl-lii*, ivlifn I ji'I'l niv tfj^tinioiiv li» tlut v.iu ji'il'lisli <if thc ini>- (li.'iii:;! virnirs of vour s,\us.\r.\.i:ii.l..\. lly (laiiirli- ter, njr*''l ten, hail nn »Illiir!iiiu'Iliiniior in Iiit ciirrt, ovt's, rtnd hnir fnr Vi-art., wliit-h wi- wcri-* uiiablL' to ciin* until weitrii'ifyinir .S.\i:sai'ai:illa. Sho \isA I«'cn well fur iiinnu- nioiilh-.," From ^frt,.l'aue E. iii.'f..a vell-!:iintrn ami much- e<lfem"l liiil'}/ff lii'inri.-'rilti: t'i'i>e J/..i/ i'o., S.J. " M V iJ.iuylili'f li:is liniViTUil n>r ii viMr p-i-t witli fc "crnru'luus iTUiiiltin, which wns vv.-v iroiiiilc-^oni'!. Xothini,' afr.ird'-il nnv ri-Hef until wn' ti-knl ynnr SAItSAlUKil.l..*,«liirii py.ni e.t:nj)l.Ii-ly ciirt'il licr-" I'roni Chnrlf.t /'. O-if/e, 7i'.<7.. nf iki ^•l'!i-Jij hitmrn Gallic, .Miirr'uj >)• *'"., ii\ tuuficinrirs tfcuitmi:lltd piijicni in X'liihii-i, V. //. "l had for s«»er;il ycnrR a v^ry troiililcHOinB hnmnr In niy fiu-*;, whiVh trr.-w font.t;nitly uoiso until it <iisli^nrL*(l n»y I'-Jiinn-H miil lA'caniL' nn intot- crnlile fiinifiinn. I irifii alni.iit ov(!ry thinjj n man conhl of li'ith uilvii'p nud inrdU-iiii-, lint without nny rnliiif wlnil.'vor, until 1 io.it yonr .Sai:.saivvi:!lI-.v. It Iininc'di;if<'ly made my lace wnrsi.-, us ynu t.>M nie it nii*rht fnrn linn:; hut in n (c<v wctka tin* new Hliiii ln;;5.io to form under thc blDtchOS, mid con- tintu'd iintif my fnce is a« snioutli ns ftny liody's. and I nm without any syniiitiniis of ihw ili!<c:isi; ttiat I know of. I t-njoy ]HTlivt health, and without it dnnljt owe lc to yunV aAits.vt'AKiLi.A '¦ Erysipelas—General Debility—Purify tho Blood. From Tir. Hohl. Smcin, Uottsfnn .9^, Xrtp Tor!:. " lm. AVKK. 1 t=i;ldoin Inil to remove Eritpliit'ts nnd Scrnfnl-'tt.< ."ior-v Uy the juT-Jinrriii^'ii-'^eo! y-Mir .SAtl??AP.\i;[1.I.v.!Hid I huve ju-it uuw curotl mint t irk of .MitHi/muit Enhipfl't-* "'ilh it. No allerativi- wo j)i>«-iess eijiLiU ilic .SAi;sA['.\i:it,i.A v<iii have su;*- .pUeil to till! profe«.-.iun a» well us tu llie p'.opK'." From .T. E. .ri-hn.*it>'t, E^f.. irnf.-i-nwiJt, Ohin. "For twelve vvars. 1. nad the yellow !:ry>ipflis on my rl;(lit ar>ii, duringj w!ij*-h tiim; I trii-d all thi3 iTlel)rati;il pltvriifitmn I eoiihl rcarl),nnd took hun¬ dred* of doH'ir- wnrili of nifdicine.-i. Thu iih-i-rs wore so li.id tliat th<' eonls In'-jinic viKlhle, inid lUO doi-tors derided tlmt my iirni niii-'l hu nnipnlnie'l. I he-'nn takinj; youi SAitsM*Aicii.i,A. 'look two bot¬ tle^, and t-ome of ynur l'lLt_s. •|.i£:ei(i.;r tliey liaVO cured mi;. 1 am now :ib well jmd -i-uinl a- nny body. lU'lii;: in n puhlic platv. my <*a-*e is knowu to,every b<jdv~iu tiiis commuuity, and exciLcti lite wouJer ot* all.'' Frmn flnu. Ilmry .^f'-nro, Jf. P. P.,of \pvtcfjsiii!, ¦ C. ll'., a Ictidmff titctitLcr tif (ht Cunudiun J'urlia- vient. " 1 hnrfi used \*our S.VRSATAnit.i.A In mv fainlly, for ijcneml t/ahiiit//, and tor purit'fihi'J lli"^ l-limil, Wltti very hei.i'll-'ial n-snlts, ateJ led euaiiduueo iU" oumiueuUiu^ it to the aiaicted." Bt. Anthony's Fire, Koso, Salt Hheum* Scald ilcnd., Sore Eyua. From Jlfirri'i/ Hickler. Ls<i..the nOle viHtor ef Pie Ttinkiutuuock I'em icr.it, I'ciin.<illaiiH't. •'Our unly child, flhoiii tlii-ee yenrs oinyo, wri ntlHi:ked hv iiimple!" Ui nis loreiiead. Thev iMpiilly spread utii'il iliev lojnud » li»itti^onie untl virnlenf nore, which covi-rou his laee. unti arlually hlimied hiBi'Ves lor-ome.hiyK. A hUil-.nl phyMi.'ianapiiIU'l nitmie oi aiUer nml other rein!-.,ie!., wiim-nt any upparent eileet. h'.r iiltetn di.vx we trnanled Ins haml.', leHl wilh them he Hh-.mld ienr open the .en- t.riuiraiideoirupl ttoimd wnii-h envenJ his whole fnve. lliivinj: tri.-d vv. ry ihii.-; elae we ha.i j-uy liiipf from, we iK-^ran L'i»»"l.' >our ^>AnsAt•Al:ILl-A aud npjiiviii^' the i."Iide oi (wtlasli lolion. «•» yol direct. 'I'Iil- sore U-jJan to h. :il wceii wu iiad irii'.n lhe Iirst hotlle. »inl"»fis welt \wieu v.e hail tiii;i.lied the (fci-ifiid. '1 he t'llJld'v eycia.-iie--», whi.-li hail .omo ont. t;n*w a^am, ami he Im lutw tin h.-rithy-lU'l i^'~ as anv other. The u!i..le ul-.^Iii that liie thiid must tile." Syphilis and laercnrinj Disoasn. From }if. Jiintm Hii^,tt,uf y.. n>uL, MiiSrtnA. " I lind yuur .Sai;.-.ai'.»1;iuI..\ a more ell.;.-ui-il n'lne.lv tor the heciin<i;aiy *>mpt.inii- of Syiih'uis and forsyphilili.^ lll^.¦;i!¦e u. iuui.y oii.er -.^e jj.-cht-';. The pniU-.-JBi.iU an* im.enteil to you Jor s^^utti of IJi<i be»t medicinea we ha^e." Fr-m .-i. J. F. en -k, .If. P., nn emhicnt ,)hji''':ion r-f y,.IuTfilC^. -I/./rfJ.. uVitj 1;* It pn-iKiU-Jlii tn^iiiior yf r/ie i.t./i.ituluic I'f'.l/.(t.-*i;Wiw-*¦(.'.<- •'Ui:.".A.Yt:i:. -My dear Sir- 1 have lunnn. vo':r Sai:sa1'AI(II.I..V an e,\.-i-tIe.U li-an-iy lor .sy/'A V-'. holh of tin' piiiit'.ry and se.-outUiry iy!>e, nn-i e.ho- tiiiU in Kome eaneslh.it weie too oljslnian! to yu't-i tn utiier ttiue.hes. I <'o n.*I know whal we ean em¬ ploy with Jiinrecertaintv oi tue-^.--., wiierj a i.*»rfer- I'lil alteiiUive it. re.[uircd." .Ifr. Cha.*. a. i'i'u /.!>:i'. "f .V^'r /JntJi.^M; y.J., had drea.ifnl nUviR on l.i-^ I-r-*. '•¦""'.'V '-^ ^l"^ «l'"'« .r mcr.-uri.tl tli!"'ii.*.; wliich ;;rew more ¦.'nivale4l t'tr yiMri, in Kpite of every ¦Tttmeiit tint e<juld he applied, uutil the i^rof Avi;u'sSAi:.'*Al*AItti,i,A relieve.l Iiiin F*\t^enyen e:in he hmnd iiiorn inveterate nnd ,|j^',p.^^i.,^ than thla, uud it tuolC ueviTul dozen bottle!* loT-nre hnn LounrThocti, Whites, Female 'Wonkness, aio prmHv produced hy intRrnal Sfrofnltms I't' .fnili .' ;!"il arc vnry often eured liy The allenitiic eifecl '¦*lhi" SAIiSAI'AHll.l.A. SotiiPeKHeH retjiitni, hiiwpv.ir. m nid o( the .'^.Mt.-iAl'AUlLlaA, thu bkiliul applicali.m of luf.d rennjitt.-s. From the tr-ltln-nm nnd iritMy-retehrafetl T'r. .fnri'h .Xfnrrill, tf f'innuvaH. "T hnve fnund yo;ir SAUSAr*i:ii-l,.i >-n cxrc-llont Hitenitivi* in disenfvs of ii-mate>». .Many riMum ot Irre'^nhnritv, L*'mn)rrhnia. Tnt-Tinl ricefathm, nnii Inrat di'bUitv. nrisinir from tiie -rrofuhmi* diatlws'-* have yichlo.l to it.and there un- low ihu do not when its eflifl il> ])roperIy iii.lPit hy loeal treatnionl. A Iwiy, unwilling lo ullnjr Ihf imliliculion of lur H>iuir,trriUf: "Mrdnus-litT nnd myself hnve hem mr'il ofa very'Miililntinl I.« irrlirea ol lonir ataudiug, b/ two Lonle* of yotir 4iAitsAfAiitLl..i." Hheumatism, Gont, Tjtvcr Complnint, Dyr- pepsia, Heart Disease^ -NeuraJicia, when rnn^Pd hv Scrofula in thi» pyntem, aro rapidi/ cured by tliia fi.'iT. SAli-SAl*AKtl.L..v. . ¦ i>roJicU.*l of miTciiry nnd mure ; remedv ur \ ALL The Latest Publications Icept regulazlj on ^ad at ^^ :aal4 AYER'S CATHARTIC! PILLS pnssc.'^s so many nilvantitcfs ori-r the otlb r purBalivoa in tli<^ niarkft. anil tlicir .«"|ifri'r virtiu-a are so univcrsHlly knmvn. tliiittvenin tl not llo more tlmn to n.wiirc the imlJic their quality is mnintaineil fquiil to the hest it cvrr has been, and Uiat;tliey may be ilepcndeil c,i lo do all thut they Imve eviT done. Prepared by ,1. C. .\YER, M. D., & Co.. - II ^"is.-.. ;|-' r-l.i).v Tor ttie bT OHABLSS A. HHBITSH^, Ho. IS Saat Ebts Etreet. And all th« Dragglsts la Lancaster. Also.ly i^ealfr ta Vailiiu truyirbin. lalj ll-Ir<n>M
Object Description
Title | Lancaster Examiner and Herald |
Masthead | Lancaster Examiner and Herald |
Volume | 39 |
Issue | 14 |
Subject | Newspapers--Pennsylvania--Lancaster County |
Description | The Lancaster Examiner and Herald was published weekly in Lancaster, Pa., during the middle years of the nineteenth century. By digitizing the years 1834-1872, patrons are provided with a view of politics and events of this tumultuous period from a liberal political slant, providing balance to the more conservative perspective of the Intelligencer-Journal, which was recently digitized by Penn State. |
Publisher | Hamersly & Richards |
Place of Publication | Lancaster, Pa. |
Date | 1865-02-25 |
Location Covered | Lancaster County (Pa.) |
Type | Text |
Original Format | Newspapers |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Language | English |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Contact | For information on source and images, contact LancasterHistory, Attn: Library Services, 230 N. President Ave., Lancaster, PA, 17603. Phone: 717-392-4633, ext. 126. Email: research@lancasterhistory.org |
Contributing Institution | LancasterHistory |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Month | 02 |
Day | 25 |
Year | 1865 |
Description
Title | Lancaster Examiner and Herald |
Masthead | Lancaster Examiner and Herald |
Volume | 39 |
Issue | 14 |
Subject | Newspapers--Pennsylvania--Lancaster County |
Description | The Lancaster Examiner and Herald was published weekly in Lancaster, Pa., during the middle years of the nineteenth century. By digitizing the years 1834-1872, patrons are provided with a view of politics and events of this tumultuous period from a liberal political slant, providing balance to the more conservative perspective of the Intelligencer-Journal, which was recently digitized by Penn State. |
Publisher | Hamersly & Richards |
Place of Publication | Lancaster, Pa. |
Date | 1865-02-25 |
Location Covered | Lancaster County (Pa.) |
Type | Text |
Original Format | Newspapers |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Digital Specifications | Image was scanned by OCLC at the Preservation Service Center in Bethlehem, PA. Archival Image is a 1-bit bitonal tiff that was scanned from microfilm at 300 dpi. The original file size was 846 kilobytes. |
Language | English |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Contact | For information on source and images, contact LancasterHistory, Attn: Library Services, 230 N. President Ave., Lancaster, PA, 17603. Phone: 717-392-4633, ext. 126. Email: research@lancasterhistory.org |
Contributing Institution | LancasterHistory |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Month | 02 |
Day | 25 |
Year | 1865 |
Page | 1 |
Resource Identifier | 18650225_001.tif |
Full Text |
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tvdh
VGL.SXXIX.
LANCAJSim. PA., Siim^ 1865.
NO. 14.
THB
fantasUt ^mam ^ Itralb
Is PixUlUbad «w«*y Wediie»doy,
The Examiner and Herald and
I« Pixtjllaliea. avary Satofdasr^
AT S2} A YEAR, OR $2 IH ADVANCE.
OtflCS No. S2H SORTH liVKBN STSEET.
I i,HIESTAND,iItmS,k J.I.lAMMAN,
BdltOT« and ppoprJetoiw. ^ Att tmdiua UUot, coomimtoUtu* te., Bhould bj.ddrciMdtoOio " :El3C»I«xJl«-<»I',"
I.anCBiteri Fa.
ADVEKIISISa DKPABTMSNT. EnraiBS Ao-raEnBOiKra by tli« ye«r, or taoUonB or a
V^tobJchwg.d at th. r=t» of $12.00 MP 8 |
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